You can see photos of Leonard Cohen, Miles Davis, Cindy Sherman , Charles Bukowski, Yoko Ono. And maybe you know this one of Jack Lemmon.
nachrichtensprecherin bricht in lachen aus
I love this one too - Susanne Daubner normally is a pillar of correctness. (One has to wait a little bit with this link: it is a video, not only the photo!)
PS: At the moment I have a huge problem with Google: I cannot comment on your blogs, have to find my password for Google (oh...), so I hope I find a way...
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The profession of shepherd has changed a lot.
Once the shepherd was a gnarled loner, with a long loden coat and a big slouch hat on his head leaning at his wooden barren-hut gazing at his sheep, his sidekick, the faithful dog running around to keep the sheep together. Trust me: as a child I saw some of these duos.
When I drove my purchases home, the shepherd, quite youngish, leaned at the hood of his car and stared on his cellphone. He didn't look up. His faithful dog seemed to regret that he hadn't a cellphone either - to him the sheep were too -- sheepish -- so why should he care?
Next morning the sheep had left (an euphemism: they bunked) - "The grass is always greener on the other side" - and show me a weak electrified fence that can keep a stubborn sheep with an intention.
A neighbour of mine came and tried to bring them back - another neighbour telephoned. The shepherd slept in his house in another village, and had taken his faithful dog with him.
And we wonder why so much is heading south?
Baa....
A few minutes ago I read it in the news: the locomotive drivers of German's Deutsche Bahn will strike again.
I had already booked a fine Hotel in Bremen for our class reunion on coming Friday and Saturday.
Really: I am so disappointed! Luckily I could cancel the hotel, my three classmates who had organised dinners and events - all their troubles were for nothing - had cancelled the meeting. Coming by car is no alternative - we have black ice, and I would have to drive over 6 hours.
If you look at the drawing underneath (I cannot turn it right) you see that Germany is stricken at the moment: the farmers protest with thousands of tractors, and the DB keeps her trains at home - only the management board got, each of them!, a bonus of 300.000 Euro (extra! each of them!)for this year of breakdowns, ill management (only ever 4 out of 10 trains are punctual - or come at all..).
Speechless...
But I live here in so tiny a village that has no shop or bakery, and the only inn has closed. To buy bread I have to drive 3 km - that's not far, and if I want to "schlepp" a rucksack full of potatoes, milk and other goodies up the hill to "my" house - over 9% steep hill upwards - of course I could walk. The little red train stops once an hour - which means waiting in the next little town after buying, and more than 9 % uphill fitness training too. (The reason why I a bought a used car).
But I try to reduce shopping - and the need of fresh bread sometimes was the only reason I had to go.
Yesterday I was happy that I could bake my first bread: we were snowed under, AND Bavaria warned explicitly against leaving the house because of black ice (is that really the right word???).
Here you see my prototype: a spelt loaf, delicious - and I wish you could smell the lovely scent in the kitchen!
I will never forget them: A storm with wind strength 7 was coming from northeast.
Husband and I had visited my parents in Bremen for Christmas. Then husband grew very ill with influenza, thus we wanted to go back to Mainz.
My father, a wise man, said: "If you want to drive, drive now very quickly."
481 km distance between Bremen and Mainz - I drove our old blue Merc, with highly-feverish husband on the backseat.
I was very young then and had I got my driver's license in 1976 - megalomaniacal after two years I applied for a contest by Cosmopolitan: a rally through the Sahara - that was my notion of "adventurous". (How come I was not elected?)
Now fate served me the total opposite:
all the time at that drive home a huge black bank of snowclouds breathed down our neck: the snow came nearer and nearer, and I had to drive very fast.
We reached Mainz, exhausted but lucky - a few hours later "Land submerged!" - a blanket of snow covered huge parts of Northern Germany which was sunken under snow - and hundreds of cars were stuck in more than a meter high snow drifts.
On "https://burstingwithhappiness.blogspot.com I tried to translate a beautiful poem of Rainer Maria Rilke. I would be very glad if you send me proposals how I can improve that translation.
I have a few doubts: is it utterly wrong to say - as Rilke did in German - "It drives the wind in winter woods/ the snowflakes.."? Of course I could have constructed a normal English sentence - but that would not have expressed the way Rilke frames it.
So: your help will be very welcomed!
Dear You,
Do you have books you read again and again?
I have a few - and at the moment I read this (again):
Mavis Cheek: Mrs Fytton's Country Life (published in 2000!)
I think the book incredibly witty and funny (maybe only for my generation?), I still can laugh on almost every page, and agree with Mail on Sunday: "..she (Mavis Cheek) possesses the wickedly sharp eye of a born satirist." I think it is Cheek's best and funniest novel.
And when I take it from the shelf it is always a sign for me that I want (or have to) change and to come down to earth again.
And feel which direction I want to go. Even if the picture might look a bit foggy or blurred - there is a direction.
Mind, Dear You: I didn't write "for" eating a Sacher-Torte.
As you might have noticed, sometimes I have to fight with English grammar and jesters as "for / of / and with" - but I hope that you didn't believe for a second that Yours Truly goes to Vienna with the single intent to eat an original Sacher-Torte - that would be "too much" of snobbishness.
For a while I thought about publishing that photo at all - I sit so crumpled that I can hear my late blue-blooded grandmother hiss: "Posture, girl, posture!" (She was oh so right). My red-blooded granny (note the difference in loving feelings) only would say: "Enjoy!"
Which I did.
And next time I'll write about the intellectual pleasures of Vienna. (After having polished off the whipped cream...)
Dear You,
I promised to tell you about the Berlin exhibition Edvard Munch. And though I will travel to Wien on Tuesday, I sit here in the early morning in Bavaria, singing a duet with "The Frog King":"What you promised you have to deliver".
The Berlinische Galerie writes:
Edvard Munch (1863–1944) challenged his contemporaries with the radical modernity of his paintings, especially in Berlin, where the Norwegian Symbolist exerted a big influence around the turn of the century. The exhibition “Magic of the North” is a partnership with the MUNCH in Oslo. It tells the story of Edvard Munch and Berlin, illustrated by paintings, prints and photographs.
Among the 80 exhibits you will not find "The Scream" (sounds like cultural names-dropping when I mention that I saw it a few weeks ago in "Secessionen.Klimt, Stuck, Liebermann" at the Alte National Galerie in Berlin. :-).
I'll just give you a few headers of the exhibition:
"Scandal. Berlin. City of Art. Exhilaration. Scream. Collapse. Psyche. The North. Life and Loves. Digs and Homes."
And photos of a few paintings:
So: if you are in Berlin - and promise (!) to be not too impatient
Dear You,
On Saturday I "hopped" to Berlin by train.
Because I can. 😄
I am now owner of a BahnCard 100 - which I think is incredibly expensive, but that depends on how often you use it.
For one year from now on I can take every train in Germany - ICE, IC, Regio - and every public transport - bus, tram, underground, ferry etc I want without - and as often as I want to (haha: I might even consider living in a train!)- from now on, after bleeding a very big sum (in my eyes) - "without paying" anything.
Son convinced me: such a card gives me spontaneity and freedom.(Hopefully no nervous breakdown - no: I see it as a chance to travel before I am no longer able to).
I used it first to visit the Oktoberfest in München: my train was too late when it arrived in Nuremberg - but "One man's meat is another man's poison" - this time I got the meat: an ICE train coming from Hamburg arrived 47 minutes too late - and I could just hop in and arrived in Munich at exactly the planned time.
(Our once oh so proud icon of punctuality has become a ruined business - so very often late, so often chaotic - since it got admission to the stock exchange).
Thus I now could go to Berlin - and stayed in my huge flat for only 3 days (hahaha: part of that Me-time is cleaning...) - well: arrival day = half a day, leaving day: half a day...
Why not longer?
Well, Son had on the Tag der Deutschen Einheit (Day of German Unity) a decadal birthday, and being invited of course I wanted to join. So I returned - and enjoyed a beautiful Birthday Party. (Brain still works: I recognised a man who asked: "Do you know who I am?" "Of course", I said, "you are Niklas." I have a very good memory for faces - last time I had met him was the day they got their A levels of their grammar school... "Well, I doubted because I have less hair these days" he muttered - yes, yes, maybe - but I don't suffer from less imagination :-)
I am highly interested if I will use my card the way I want to. In Berlin I was very happy: I could visit the exhibition on Edvard Munch - and will tell you in the next post.
Yours Truly
Britta
Dear You,
yesterday I went to the "Graffelmarkt" in Fürth - a flea market which takes place twice a year. "Graffel" is dialect and means: "stuff" - well, actually I try to down-size my "stuff", hahaha...
But the weather was fine, the little red train is on the rail again (after a month off absence - they try to repair the rail network of the Deutsche Bahn).
In Fürth, hundreds of roaring football fans clogged the way out of the station - "singing" and spurred by beer, beer, beer. I thanked God that I am tall and not shy, thus I managed to part the beer stinking crowd.
The photo below gives a wrong impression, many visitors came to the market.
I enjoyed to visit normally private little yards behind the houses.
When I was tired, I followed intuition, a staircase up to a little place. And there I found something! Not valuable, but soothing the heart :-)
In Berlin I have - beside my Spode - an (incomplete) vintage coffee service by Royal Cauldon, Victoria - I found it about 20 years ago when I still lived in Hamburg. In Fürth stood a few remains, e.g. a funny butter dish, but in my long life I learned to "think before you buy" (at least most times) and so I "only" bought three egg cups and two porridge bowls.
They will join their "family" in Berlin soon!
Dear You,
this is no complaint. It's just real life - and revision of some expectations that did not consider all possibilities.
The triplets had their fourth birthday - and two days later kindergarten started.
The beautiful kindergarten is in the next little town, and my son brings them there, and my DiL brings them back after they have eaten their lunch.
That was the plan.
But every child, even when they are triplets, is different.
The "twins" have more difficulties in adjusting and letting Mama go - the third, single, is the star and jumped into her group (each triplet joins another group, which I think is a very wise decision of their parents).
But soon all adjusted well.
But then the first got a cold, with fever - so she had to stay at home.
The second had to be collected after one&half hour in kindergarten = familiarisation time for her, decided the Kindergärtnerin.
So I looked after the lively but sick one, DiL went by car to fetch Number 2, then, 2 hours later, she had to fetch no.3. (I have a car but do not drive the children - I think the responsibility is too great).
Two days later, no.1 was healthy again - and of course you guess what happened? Now no.2 was sick.
So: DiL and I are looking forward for a "normal" day.
Yours Truly , (a bit flustered)